The Flow: Rivers, Water and Wildness – WINNER OF THE 2023 WAINWRIGHT PRIZE FOR NATURE WRITING
Autor Amy-Jane Beeren Limba Engleză Paperback – 2 aug 2023
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781472977403
ISBN-10: 1472977408
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Wildlife
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1472977408
Pagini: 400
Dimensiuni: 129 x 198 x 25 mm
Greutate: 0.28 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Wildlife
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
The narrative combines exciting accounts of adrenaline water sports with beautiful descriptions of the natural world, forays into the culture and mythology of the British Isles and passionate advocacy for these living, flowing habitats.
Notă biografică
Amy-Jane Beer is a biologist turned naturalist and writer. She has worked for more than 20 years as a science writer and editor, contributing to more than 40 books on natural history. She is currently a Country Diarist for The Guardian, a columnist for British Wildlife and a feature writer for BBC Wildlife magazine, among others. She campaigns for the equality of access to nature and collaboration between the farming and conservation sectors. She is a member of the steering group of the environmental arts charity New Networks for Nature and the land rights campaign RightToRoam.org.uk, and is honorary President of the national park society Friends of the Dales. Her book The Flow won the 2023 James Cropper Wainwright Prize for Nature Writing.
Cuprins
Prologue: Only water, moving onChapter 1: Fresh and yet so very old Eddy: Snow dome Chapter 2: Torrent Eddy: Hollowing Chapter 3: Oak-water Eddy: Groundwater Chapter 4: Fly while we may Eddy: Dark water Chapter 5: Lines upon the land Meander: Bath toys Chapter 6: The meanings of water Eddy: Otter Chapter 7: The Bell Guy and the Gypsey Chapter 8: A willow grows aslant a brook Eddy: Minus seven Chapter 9: The cry of the Dart Meander: Flow Chapter 10: Trespassers will Eddy: Summer on the Nene Chapter 11: Chalk stream dreamingEddy: Heron Chapter 12: Land covered by water Eddy: High water Chapter 13: Ouroboros Meander: Ghosts in the willows Chapter 14: The silver fish Chapter 15: Light and water Eddy: Damnation Chapter 16: Anadrome Chapter 17: Riverwoods Eddy: Flowover Chapter 18: Confluence and influence Meander: A river released Chapter 19: The Mucky Beck Eddy: Withow Gap Chapter 20: Rodents of unusual size Eddy: The narrow bridge Chapter 21: Heartland Chapter 22: A descent into Hell Gill (and out the other side)Epilogue Author's note and acknowledgements Further reading Index
Recenzii
A true masterpiece; generous, elegant, acute, tender and furious.
The perfect commingling of deep research with sparkling observation and quiet eddies of feeling, helmed by a lifelong kayaker, biologist and all-round adventurous soul... small wonder The Flow is such a knockout. I loved it.
A rich mix of history and mythology, of science and nature writing at its very best.
Our 2023 Nature Book of the Year winner is regrettably very topical, and every judge absolutely loved the book. The glorious detail and personal experiences, all written in such elegant and beautifully poetic language, was unparalleled.
A quietly courageous, open-hearted exploration of Britain's becks, bourns and streams.
Lyrical, wholehearted and wise, The Flow is a hymn for the rivers of Britain.
Honest, raw and moving, Amy's prose is as captivating as the rivers she describes. I thought I knew what rivers were, but this stunning book is a powerful reminder of their infinity, their mystery, and their bewildering complexity.
The Flow moves deftly between deeply touching personal experience and carefully-researched erudition. It is a book of wit, of wonder and of wisdom.
The Flow is an extraordinary book by an extraordinary author.
In a golden age for nature writing, this stunning book is one of the very best.
A gutsy biologist with webbed feet, Amy-Jane Beer plunges the reader into rivers the length and breadth of Britain. We emerge bathed in wonder and full of fresh understanding.
Part memoir, part celebration of the many rivers and waters of Britain, The Flow is passionately alive - a work of tremendous range and scope by one of our finest writers about the living world.
The Flow is a tour de force: blending crystal-clear prose with mythic poetry and a cascade of lucid facts, washed down with uplifting insights into life, death and the water that sustains us.
A fascinating travelogue [.] Beer's prose has the luminous beauty of poetry, blending personal experience and absorbing research with a sense of awe.
Haunted by loss, The Flow is about the urgency of a life, land and love.
From the incredibly moving opening scene, to a delightful conclusion, Amy-Jane Beer takes us on a journey on, in and through the waterways of Britain, in sparkling prose. A worthy successor to Roger Deakin's Waterlog.
The Flow is a wonderful book: as passionate as it is knowledgeable. From Yorkshire Derwent to Dart to Dee via the Zanskar, Amy-Jane Beer really does take us, in her phrase, 'as close as we might ever get to being a river'.
With a poet's gift for description, Beer makes her global travels vivid [.] She's got an ability to make even a small moment resonate, such as her child's serendipitous discovery of a carnivorous sundew plant, with sharp prose and quick pacing. The result is an aquatic tour de force.
Beer's book examines the reverential place rivers hold in our culture and the stories hidden in their depths.
A sublime and companionable meditation on nature's processes.
I have read dozens of books about rivers and The Flow is one of the finest.
Necessary reading for us all.
This erudite book is a joyous combination of science, nature, history, and mythology [.] a genuinely moving voyage of discovery of our ecological and personal place in the nature that surrounds us.
The Flow is an epic memoir that inspires awe for rivers and reveals their dual nature as both boundaries and portals.
Beer's moving book is about water and landscapes as well as friendship, memory, loss and resilience. It is full of quiet wisdom and passion, and shows us what words can do when the personal and the ecological are blended organically.
Water courses through biologist Amy-Jane Beer's deep-dive into the lyrical beauty of Britain's rivers.
Simply beautiful.
The Flow is gutsy and profound from the off, with exquisite evocation of place, dives into deep time, moments of humour and surging anger at what we've done to our rivers.
As with all the best books about nature, The Flow is a marriage of two things: a hard-won knowledge of the subject and a rare ability to write beautifully [...] a warm and immersive book.
Beautiful book.
The perfect commingling of deep research with sparkling observation and quiet eddies of feeling, helmed by a lifelong kayaker, biologist and all-round adventurous soul... small wonder The Flow is such a knockout. I loved it.
A rich mix of history and mythology, of science and nature writing at its very best.
Our 2023 Nature Book of the Year winner is regrettably very topical, and every judge absolutely loved the book. The glorious detail and personal experiences, all written in such elegant and beautifully poetic language, was unparalleled.
A quietly courageous, open-hearted exploration of Britain's becks, bourns and streams.
Lyrical, wholehearted and wise, The Flow is a hymn for the rivers of Britain.
Honest, raw and moving, Amy's prose is as captivating as the rivers she describes. I thought I knew what rivers were, but this stunning book is a powerful reminder of their infinity, their mystery, and their bewildering complexity.
The Flow moves deftly between deeply touching personal experience and carefully-researched erudition. It is a book of wit, of wonder and of wisdom.
The Flow is an extraordinary book by an extraordinary author.
In a golden age for nature writing, this stunning book is one of the very best.
A gutsy biologist with webbed feet, Amy-Jane Beer plunges the reader into rivers the length and breadth of Britain. We emerge bathed in wonder and full of fresh understanding.
Part memoir, part celebration of the many rivers and waters of Britain, The Flow is passionately alive - a work of tremendous range and scope by one of our finest writers about the living world.
The Flow is a tour de force: blending crystal-clear prose with mythic poetry and a cascade of lucid facts, washed down with uplifting insights into life, death and the water that sustains us.
A fascinating travelogue [.] Beer's prose has the luminous beauty of poetry, blending personal experience and absorbing research with a sense of awe.
Haunted by loss, The Flow is about the urgency of a life, land and love.
From the incredibly moving opening scene, to a delightful conclusion, Amy-Jane Beer takes us on a journey on, in and through the waterways of Britain, in sparkling prose. A worthy successor to Roger Deakin's Waterlog.
The Flow is a wonderful book: as passionate as it is knowledgeable. From Yorkshire Derwent to Dart to Dee via the Zanskar, Amy-Jane Beer really does take us, in her phrase, 'as close as we might ever get to being a river'.
With a poet's gift for description, Beer makes her global travels vivid [.] She's got an ability to make even a small moment resonate, such as her child's serendipitous discovery of a carnivorous sundew plant, with sharp prose and quick pacing. The result is an aquatic tour de force.
Beer's book examines the reverential place rivers hold in our culture and the stories hidden in their depths.
A sublime and companionable meditation on nature's processes.
I have read dozens of books about rivers and The Flow is one of the finest.
Necessary reading for us all.
This erudite book is a joyous combination of science, nature, history, and mythology [.] a genuinely moving voyage of discovery of our ecological and personal place in the nature that surrounds us.
The Flow is an epic memoir that inspires awe for rivers and reveals their dual nature as both boundaries and portals.
Beer's moving book is about water and landscapes as well as friendship, memory, loss and resilience. It is full of quiet wisdom and passion, and shows us what words can do when the personal and the ecological are blended organically.
Water courses through biologist Amy-Jane Beer's deep-dive into the lyrical beauty of Britain's rivers.
Simply beautiful.
The Flow is gutsy and profound from the off, with exquisite evocation of place, dives into deep time, moments of humour and surging anger at what we've done to our rivers.
As with all the best books about nature, The Flow is a marriage of two things: a hard-won knowledge of the subject and a rare ability to write beautifully [...] a warm and immersive book.
Beautiful book.